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  • The Kurds
    5194
    The Kurds
    100 Kurds from all over Iraqi Kurdistan, protest outside the U.N. headquarters in Dohuk. They felt that the U.N was not protecting them from Sadam Hussein's forces.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5194
    The Kurds
    100 Kurds from all over Iraqi Kurdistan, protest outside the U.N. headquarters in Dohuk. They felt that the U.N was not protecting them from Sadam Hussein's forces.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4921
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Men enjoy a beer on a Sunday afternoon in Murmansk, the world's largest Arctic city, in northern Russia.
    2011 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4921
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Men enjoy a beer on a Sunday afternoon in Murmansk, the world's largest Arctic city, in northern Russia.
    2011 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email Justin Jin for usage instructions.

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4880
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Sergei and Masha, a 19-year-old mother, drink beer during polar midnight in spring in the nickel-producing town of Zapolyarna. Here the fortune of the population is declining with the collapse of heavy industry in the Arctic north.
    2010 Justin Jin
    4880
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Sergei and Masha, a 19-year-old mother, drink beer during polar midnight in spring in the nickel-producing town of Zapolyarna. Here the fortune of the population is declining with the collapse of heavy industry in the Arctic north.
    2010 Justin Jin

     

  • Héritage toxique
    3569
    Héritage toxique
    Magnitogorsk / Russie
    L'aciérie Lenine est située dans le centre de la ville. On peut la voir de toutes les villes alentour.
    © Gerd Ludwig
    03/11/2009
    3569
    03/11/2009
    Héritage toxique
    Magnitogorsk / Russie
    L'aciérie Lenine est située dans le centre de la ville. On peut la voir de toutes les villes alentour.
    © Gerd Ludwig

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4889
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    People walk by an empty boarding house in Vorkuta. The city’s population has fallen by a third since the break-up of the Soviet Union, when subsidies for the Far North were reduced.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4889
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    People walk by an empty boarding house in Vorkuta. The city’s population has fallen by a third since the break-up of the Soviet Union, when subsidies for the Far North were reduced.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4866
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Reindeer herders Simyon and Vanya travel hours by sled from their tent in the tundra to buy supplies at the village shop in Sovetsky.
    Nomadic people like them have a mutually cautious relationship with the Russians who live in the Far North.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4866
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Reindeer herders Simyon and Vanya travel hours by sled from their tent in the tundra to buy supplies at the village shop in Sovetsky.
    Nomadic people like them have a mutually cautious relationship with the Russians who live in the Far North.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4865
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Reindeer herder Simyon travel hours by sled from his tent in the tundra to buy supplies at the village shop in Sovetsky.
    Construction of gas pipelines in the tundra is threatening the herders’ way of life, forcing them to travel further afield in search of pastures.Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4865
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Reindeer herder Simyon travel hours by sled from his tent in the tundra to buy supplies at the village shop in Sovetsky.
    Construction of gas pipelines in the tundra is threatening the herders’ way of life, forcing them to travel further afield in search of pastures.Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4891
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Buildings around Vorkuta are being surrendered to the elements as people flee to the south. In this apartment block on the edge of the tundra in Yor Shor village outside Vorkuta town, only one family is left.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4891
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Buildings around Vorkuta are being surrendered to the elements as people flee to the south. In this apartment block on the edge of the tundra in Yor Shor village outside Vorkuta town, only one family is left.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4884
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Yorshor, an abandoned village near Vorkuta. Most people have left after the closure of the Soviet-era coal mine.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow.

    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4884
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Yorshor, an abandoned village near Vorkuta. Most people have left after the closure of the Soviet-era coal mine.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow.

    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4869
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Karp Belgayev, a coal miner, walks through Yor Shor, an abandoned village near Vorkuta where he is among the last ten inhabitants. Miners say that after ten years working underground it is impossible to remove black rings from around the eyes.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4869
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    Karp Belgayev, a coal miner, walks through Yor Shor, an abandoned village near Vorkuta where he is among the last ten inhabitants. Miners say that after ten years working underground it is impossible to remove black rings from around the eyes.
    Vorkuta is a coal mining and former Gulag town 1,200 miles north east of Moscow, beyond the Arctic Circle, where temperatures in winter drop to -50C.
    Here, whole villages are being slowly deserted and reclaimed by snow, while the financial crisis is squeezing coal mining companies that already struggle to find workers.
    Moscow says its Far North is a strategic region, targeting huge investment to exploit its oil and gas resources. But there is a paradox: the Far North is actually dying. Every year thousands of people from towns and cities in the Russian Arctic are fleeing south. The system of subsidies that propped up Siberia and the Arctic in the Soviet times has crumbled. Now there’s no advantage to living in the Far North - salaries are no higher than in central Russia and prices for goods are higher.
    Copyright 2009 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Face à la réalité
    2151
    Face à la réalité
    DHAKA /BENGLADESH/ 04.07.2007 : une vague de pousse-pousse traverse une rue de Dhaka, Bengladesh. Il y a plus de pousse-pousse à Dhaka que dans toute autre ville du monde. On l’appelle « la capitale du pousse-pousse ». Ces véhicules de couleurs vives constituent une source d’emploi.
    Manoocher Deghati
    2151
    Face à la réalité
    DHAKA /BENGLADESH/ 04.07.2007 : une vague de pousse-pousse traverse une rue de Dhaka, Bengladesh. Il y a plus de pousse-pousse à Dhaka que dans toute autre ville du monde. On l’appelle « la capitale du pousse-pousse ». Ces véhicules de couleurs vives constituent une source d’emploi.
    Manoocher Deghati

     

  • The Kurds
    5140
    The Kurds
    Diyarbakir is the unofficial capital of Turkish Kurdistan; more than 90 percent of its one million residents are Kurdish, which makes it the largest Kurdish city in the world.

    Diyarbakir, Turkey 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5140
    The Kurds
    Diyarbakir is the unofficial capital of Turkish Kurdistan; more than 90 percent of its one million residents are Kurdish, which makes it the largest Kurdish city in the world.

    Diyarbakir, Turkey 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • Face à la réalité
    2123
    Face à la réalité
    NAIROBI /KENYA /12.07.2006: Un garçon est assis devant sa maison dans un bidonville de Kibera à Nairobi. C’est un des plus grands bidonvilles du monde peuplé d’un million d’habitants.
    Manoocher Deghati
    2123
    Face à la réalité
    NAIROBI /KENYA /12.07.2006: Un garçon est assis devant sa maison dans un bidonville de Kibera à Nairobi. C’est un des plus grands bidonvilles du monde peuplé d’un million d’habitants.
    Manoocher Deghati

     

  • Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    4928
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    People walk into a metro outside a casino and surrounded by billboards in central Moscow. The Rolls-Royce is displayed as a price for the jackpot.

    Copyright 2006 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    4928
    Zone of Absolute Discomfort
    People walk into a metro outside a casino and surrounded by billboards in central Moscow. The Rolls-Royce is displayed as a price for the jackpot.

    Copyright 2006 by Justin Jin. All rights reserved.
    Email justin@justinjin.com for instructions.

     

  • Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    3079
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Des manifestants jettent des pierres sur la police à Bhaktapur, pour protester contre le massacre de onze civils tués par les soldats de l’armée royale.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    3079
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Des manifestants jettent des pierres sur la police à Bhaktapur, pour protester contre le massacre de onze civils tués par les soldats de l’armée royale.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    36.4MB digital original RAW (CR2) file from Canon 5D camera

     

  • Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    3098
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Des manifestants ont lancé des torches à la police de Katmandou, au Népal, le 29 avril 2004. Des semaines d'affrontements entre la police et les manifestants appelant le roi à rétablir la démocratie ont conduit à des milliers d'arrestations et des centaines de blessés.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    3098
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Des manifestants ont lancé des torches à la police de Katmandou, au Népal, le 29 avril 2004. Des semaines d'affrontements entre la police et les manifestants appelant le roi à rétablir la démocratie ont conduit à des milliers d'arrestations et des centaines de blessés.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    18MB Original file is RAW (CRW) from Canon 10D

     

  • Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    3097
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Un policier arrête un manifestant après l’avoir sauvé d’une bousculade à Katmandou.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    3097
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Un policier arrête un manifestant après l’avoir sauvé d’une bousculade à Katmandou.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    Original file is RAW (CRW) from Canon 10D

     

  • Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    3096
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Une formation de police s’apprête à affronter des manifestants à Katmandou.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    3096
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Une formation de police s’apprête à affronter des manifestants à Katmandou.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    18MB Original file is RAW (CRW) from Canon 10D

     

  • Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    3095
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Des manifestants antimonarchistes incendient une voiture.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    3095
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Des manifestants antimonarchistes incendient une voiture.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    Original file is RAW (CRW) from Canon 10D

     

  • Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    3064
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Les manifestants anti-monarchiques applaudissent après avoir incendié une voiture et bloqué la route à Katmandou, au Népal, le 20 avril 2004. Des semaines d'affrontements entre la police et les manifestants appelant le roi à rétablir la démocratie ont conduit à des milliers d'arrestations et des centaines de blessés.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    3064
    Chute d'un Dieu souverain
    Les manifestants anti-monarchiques applaudissent après avoir incendié une voiture et bloqué la route à Katmandou, au Népal, le 20 avril 2004. Des semaines d'affrontements entre la police et les manifestants appelant le roi à rétablir la démocratie ont conduit à des milliers d'arrestations et des centaines de blessés.
    © Tomas Van Hourtryve / VII Mentor
    Original file is RAW (CRW) from Canon 10D

     

  • The Kurds
    5204
    The Kurds
    In Dohuk, Iraq, an early morning gas line. Some individuals waited as long as 5 days. After the Gulf War in 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5204
    The Kurds
    In Dohuk, Iraq, an early morning gas line. Some individuals waited as long as 5 days. After the Gulf War in 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5187
    The Kurds
    Kurdish children in an early morning scene among the back alleys of the ancient city of Diyarbakir.
    Diyarbakir, Turkey. 1991

    During its 3,000 year history, the ancient Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, Turkey, with its warrens of cobblestone alleyways, has acquired a distinct timelessness. 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5187
    The Kurds
    Kurdish children in an early morning scene among the back alleys of the ancient city of Diyarbakir.
    Diyarbakir, Turkey. 1991

    During its 3,000 year history, the ancient Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, Turkey, with its warrens of cobblestone alleyways, has acquired a distinct timelessness. 1991
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5117
    The Kurds
    Members of a Kurdish youth gang, called the Sioux, on the streets of Berlin.
    Berlin, Germany, 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5117
    The Kurds
    Members of a Kurdish youth gang, called the Sioux, on the streets of Berlin.
    Berlin, Germany, 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • The Kurds
    5141
    The Kurds
    A soldier stands on guard at a United States checkpoint outside of Zakho, Iraq on May 4, 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII
    5141
    The Kurds
    A soldier stands on guard at a United States checkpoint outside of Zakho, Iraq on May 4, 1991.
    © Ed Kashi / VII

     

  • Face à la réalité
    2122
    Face à la réalité
    SAN JOSE / COSATA RICA/ 1991 : Le 18 juin 1991, des écolières du Costa Rica dans leurs uniformes sont allongées dans la rue à San José pour protester contre le nombre croissants d’accidents de la route. Beaucoup d’enfants ont été tués dans les rues à cause des accidents.
    Manoocher Deghati
    2122
    Face à la réalité
    SAN JOSE / COSATA RICA/ 1991 : Le 18 juin 1991, des écolières du Costa Rica dans leurs uniformes sont allongées dans la rue à San José pour protester contre le nombre croissants d’accidents de la route. Beaucoup d’enfants ont été tués dans les rues à cause des accidents.
    Manoocher Deghati